PLATFORM Youth Culture Magazine Issue 12

Page 41

Local Musician Timothy Chivers After five long years since a music workshop at Youth ARC, we interviewed local Hobart musician Timothy Chivers about how he became the local muso hero we all love to see! Tim started with a couple of originally written and produced songs, and since then, has gone on to write and create many more musical projects and performances, becoming more deeply involved in the music industry. Let’s go back to the beginning. How did you get into songwriting, Tim? I guess it started when I was 12 years old; that’s when I first picked up a guitar. High school was a pretty crappy experience as it is for most people (haha), but I had a lot of time by myself to just practice and learn guitar. I started writing songs then. A lot of it was self-taught, but I did take a lot of material from my music teacher at the time. My brother and dad were also really good influences, because they were both musicians, and my brother gave me his old guitar (which I think was a crappy Kmart guitar that his friend carved some pretty pictures into). It was a very beautiful sounding guitar though (for something that most likely came from Kmart). I literally self-taught myself; I took home a lot of music sheets from high school and just practiced heaps at home. I’d spend hours

in my bedroom learning how to play ‘Smoke on the Water’. That’s where I got my start! Okay let’s fast track a little bit. You’ve written some songs, but now you’ve gotten into studying a bit more on the technical side? Yeah, I decided in year 12 that I wanted to study music technology at the University of Tasmania because I thought I needed a lot of help with the performance side of things, and in retrospect I definitely needed help with performance. So at the end of my degree I decided to get into a Diploma of Performance in guitar. It was quite a challenge at the time. What’s it like being connected in the Hobart music scene, meeting other songwriters and key people who contribute to creating opportunities in the music scene? Meeting people like Amy Fogarty, a key person in the music scene in Hobart, has been one of the biggest blessings. To her credit (and for the people reading this, she runs Meraki Management) Amy is one of the most intelligent, honest and hard-working people on Earth! She helped me quite a bit in succeeding and actually making an income from music, which a lot of people don’t think is possible. She helps lots of musicians too, not just me. Musicians are also very resilient people

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The Market

2min
page 62

Koh-Dee Music

1min
page 60

Allan McConnell

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page 59

Producer

1min
page 61

Close Counters

2min
page 58

Singer Songwriter

1min
page 57

Licitis

2min
page 55

Music Producer

2min
page 52

Dancer Zack

3min
pages 53-54

Celeste Meincke

1min
page 56

Henderson

3min
page 49

Hobart

3min
pages 50-51

Hobart Muso Zac

5min
pages 47-48

Squid Fishing

3min
page 46

Story Competition

19min
pages 27-40

Timothy Chivers

3min
page 43

Local Musician

3min
pages 41-42

Zena Mohamad

5min
pages 44-45

Will Joseph

1min
page 24

VOXPOP: Living Through the Pandemic

1min
page 25

Videographer

3min
pages 22-23

Artistry with Malachi Johns

6min
pages 18-21

Meet YAC West Tamar

4min
pages 10-11

Contributors

2min
pages 4-5

Moments of

1min
page 15

Jess Murray with

4min
pages 13-14

Animator and Illustrator Amara Grantz

3min
pages 16-17

Jiemba Sands Viral Sensation

3min
pages 8-9

Solomon Smith’s Gamer World

5min
pages 6-7
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